By Madison Ruppert:
Sandra Cortez got a lot more than she bargained for when she went to buy a new car and within an hour was threatened with calls to the FBI by the staff at the Denver dealership she went to.
Cortez’s ludicrous encounter is far from the first and will almost certainly not be the last case of someone being confused with a terrorist or international criminal simply due to a similar or shared name and then being treated as such.
In this instance, Cortez was unlucky enough to happen to share her
name with someone on a government list including fine company like
suspected terrorists, international drug traffickers and even people
associated with weapons of mass destruction.
The 68-year-old grandmother and accountant clearly is none of those
things, but it didn’t stop her from being forced to struggle over the
mistake from 2005 to 2010.
The false information came up on Cortez’s credit report,
which she believed was perfectly clean and showed her to have excellent
credit having checked it out before going into the car dealership.
Unfortunately, little did Cortez know, the credit report she was issued was not
the same as the one issued to the dealership. The one the dealership
saw linked her to a Columbian drug trafficker with what the Atlanta Journal-Constitution calls “a similar name.”
Indeed, it appears that the only name they actually share is their
first names. The spelling of their last names is not even the same.
Cortez then had to spend years attempting to get TransUnion and the federal government to amend her record to no avail.
After much pleading in vain, she was forced to hire a consumer-law attorney named Jim Francis in order to sue TransUnion.
Even this proved to be a major struggle for Cortez. The process
included a trial, appeals and even a reduction of the funds she was
awarded.
Originally, she was awarded $750,000 by a jury (from which the
government would take their cut, of course) after which it was reduced
to $150,000 (also before taxes).
When asked for comment, the lobbying group which speaks for
TransUnion refused to address the case and the current owners of the
dealership – which was the John Elway Subaru dealership at that time –
were unfamiliar with the events and thus declined to comment as well.
“I thought I would be driving my new car back to work after lunch,” Cortez said, remembering that March 31st in 2005. “I couldn’t imagine what would happen next.”
What happened next was something which many people would dread: being
told that you are on the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets
Control (OFAC) list, meaning you are suspected of being a terrorist or
involved with major international criminal activity.
Apparently, the OFAC Advisor at TransUnion had, for some strange
reason, confused Cortez with the Columbian drug trafficker Sandra Cortes
Quintera.
This mistake led to a whopping five years of work in an attempt to
get the false information removed all because of an errant employee
somewhere along the line.
Thankfully, Cortez wasn’t actually arrested, jailed or beaten while
being confused for another person. I honestly wouldn’t be surprised if
such a thing were to happen in today’s world.
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